99-1547. Medicare Program; Coverage of Ambulance Services and Vehicle and Staff Requirements  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 15 (Monday, January 25, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 3637-3650]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-1547]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Health Care Financing Administration
    
    42 CFR Parts 409, 410, and 424
    
    [HCFA-1813-FC]
    RIN 0938-AH13
    
    
    Medicare Program; Coverage of Ambulance Services and Vehicle and 
    Staff Requirements
    
    AGENCY: Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), HHS.
    
    ACTION: Final rule with comment period.
    
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    SUMMARY: This final rule with comment period revises and updates 
    Medicare policy concerning ambulance services. It identifies 
    destinations to which ambulance services are covered, establishes 
    requirements for the vehicles and staff used to furnish ambulance 
    services, and clarifies coverage of nonemergency ambulance services for 
    Medicare beneficiaries. This rule also implements section 4531(c) of 
    the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 concerning Medicare coverage for 
    paramedic interecept services in rural communities.
    
    DATES: Effective Date: These regulations are effective on February 24, 
    1999. Comment Period: We will consider comments concerning Medicare 
    coverage for paramedic intercept services in rural areas if we receive 
    the comments at the appropriate address, as provided below, no later 
    than 5 p.m. on March 26, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Mail written comments (an original and three copies) to the 
    following address:
    
    Health Care Financing Administration, Department of Health and Human 
    Services, Attention: HCFA-1813-FC P.O. Box 7517, Baltimore, MD 21207-
    0517.
    
        If you prefer, you may deliver your written comments (an original 
    and three copies) to one of the following addresses:
    
    Room 443-G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200 Independence Avenue, SW, 
    Washington, DC 20201, or
    Room C5-14-03, Central Building, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 
    21244-1850.
    
        Comments may also be submitted electronically to the following e-
    mail address: [email protected] For e-mail comment procedures, see 
    the beginning of SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. For further information on 
    ordering copies of the Federal Register containing this document and on 
    electronic access, see the beginning of SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert Niemann, (410) 786-4569 for 
    issues relating to payment for Paramedic Intercept Services. Margot 
    Blige, (410) 786-4642 for all other issues.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    E-mail, Comments, Availability of Copies, and Electronic Access
    
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    Friday, except for Federal holidays.
    
    I. Background
    
    A. Statutory Coverage of Ambulance Services
    
        Under section 1861(s)(7) of the Social Security Act (the Act), 
    Medicare Part B (Supplementary Medical Insurance) covers and pays for 
    ambulance services, to the extent prescribed in regulations, when the 
    use of other methods of transportation would be contraindicated. The 
    House Ways and Means Committee and Senate Finance Committee Reports 
    that accompanied the 1965 Social Security Amendments suggest that the 
    Congress intended that (1) the ambulance benefit cover transportation 
    services only if other means of transportation are contraindicated by 
    the beneficiary's
    
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    medical condition, and (2) only ambulance service to local facilities 
    be covered unless necessary services are not available locally, in 
    which case, transportation to the nearest facility furnishing those 
    services is covered (H.R. Rep. No. 213, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. 37, and 
    S. Rep. No. 404, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., Pt I, 43 (1965)). The reports 
    indicate that transportation may also be provided from one hospital to 
    another, to the beneficiary's home, or to an extended care facility.
    
    B. Current Medicare Regulations for Ambulance Services
    
        Our regulations relating to ambulance services are located at 42 
    CFR Part 410, subpart B. Section 410.10(i) lists ambulance services as 
    one of the covered medical and other health services under Medicare 
    Part B. Ambulance services are subject to basic conditions and 
    limitations set forth at Sec. 410.12 and to specific conditions and 
    limitations included at Sec. 410.40.
    
    II. Provisions of the Proposed Regulations
    
        On June 17, 1997, we published a proposed rule in the Federal 
    Register at 62 FR 32715 that would revise and update our ambulance 
    regulations at Sec. 410.40. Specifically, we proposed to provide 
    coverage of ambulance services only if the supplier meets the proposed 
    applicable vehicle, staff, and billing and reporting requirements and 
    proposed medical necessity and origin and destination requirements. We 
    also proposed to cover ambulance services in the United States at 
    either the basic life support (BLS) or advanced life support (ALS) 
    level of services. Under the proposed rule, we would base coverage on a 
    beneficiary's medical condition as described by the International 
    Classification of Diseases, 9th revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-
    CM) diagnosis codes; these codes would be used to bill for ambulance 
    services. In addition, we proposed an exception to the ALS/BLS 
    distinction for certain non-Metropolitan Statistical Areas.
        We also proposed to provide for the coverage of nonemergency 
    transportation, including but not limited to transportation for an end-
    stage renal disease (ESRD) beneficiary, if the ambulance supplier 
    obtains a written physician's order certifying that the beneficiary be 
    transported in an ambulance because other means of transportation are 
    contraindicated.
        Finally, we proposed to allow coverage of ambulance services for 
    ESRD beneficiaries to the nearest treatment facility rather than to the 
    nearest hospital-based facility.
    
    III. The Balanced Budget Act of 1997
    
        On August 5, 1997, after we had issued the ambulance services 
    proposed rule, the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (the BBA), Public Law 
    105-33, was enacted. Section 4531(b) of the BBA adds a new section 
    1834(l) to the Act, which provides for the establishment of a fee 
    schedule for payment of ambulance services effective January 1, 2000. 
    In addition, section 1834(l)(1) of the Act requires that the fee 
    schedule be developed through a negotiated rulemaking process. Section 
    1834(l)(20(B) of the Act provides that, in establishing the fee 
    schedule, the Secretary must establish definitions for ambulance 
    services that link payments to the types of services furnished.
        As noted above, one of the provisions of the June 17, 1997 proposed 
    rule would have defined ambulance services as either ALS or BLS 
    services and linked the Medicare payment to the type of service (ALS or 
    BLS) required by the beneficiary's condition. Under section 1834(l) of 
    the Act, this type of service definition and resulting payment is 
    required to be a part of the negotiated rulemaking. Therefore, we are 
    deferring any final action on those provisions of the proposed rule. We 
    will reopen the discussion of the definition of ambulance services and 
    the appropriate payment as a part of the negotiated rulemaking process. 
    We note, however, that our current policy, as stated in section 5116 of 
    the Medicare Carriers Manual (MCM), which provides for the payment of 
    two separate reasonable charge rates for ambulance services, one for 
    BLS level of ambulance service and one for ALS level of service, 
    remains applicable. In general, the ALS reasonable charge may be used 
    as a basis for payment when an ALS level of ambulance service is 
    provided. However, as stated in MCM section 5116.1, there may be 
    instances when the supplier exhibits a pattern of uneconomical care 
    such as repeated use of ALS ambulances in situations in which it should 
    have known that the less expensive BLS ambulance was available and that 
    its use would have been medically appropriate. While we allow higher 
    payments for the ALS services, the carrier is responsible for 
    evaluating the appropriate level of service for each claim.
        In addition to providing for a fee schedule for ambulance services, 
    section 4531(c) of the BBA authorizes the Secretary to include coverage 
    of ALS services provided by a paramedic intercept service provider in a 
    rural area if certain conditions are met. We are implementing this 
    provision in this final rule with comment period. We discuss, in 
    detail, this provision and the changes to the regulations necessary to 
    implement it, in section V of this preamble.
    
    IV. Analysis of, and Responses to, Public Comments
    
        In response to our proposed regulation published on June 17, 1997, 
    we received 2,270 comments from ambulance service suppliers, emergency 
    medical service personnel, ambulance associations, health care 
    providers, Medicare contractors, and private citizens. As noted above, 
    because we are not proceeding in this final rule with the proposed 
    provisions related to basing coverage and payment of ambulance service 
    on the level of medically necessary services, we are not responding to 
    the comments we received concerning that proposal, including the use of 
    ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes to determine medical necessity and the 
    proposed exception to this policy for ALS services furnished in areas 
    that are not part of a Metropolitan Statistical Area. We not that the 
    vast majority of the comments concerned the definition of services as 
    ALS or BLS. The remaining comments and our responses are set forth 
    below.
    
    A. Medicare Coverage of Ambulance Services--Basic Rule
    
        In the proposed rule, we clarified in Sec. 410.40(a) the 
    circumstances under which an ambulance service is paid under Medicare 
    Part B as opposed to Medicare Part A. We received one comment on this 
    proposal.
        Comment: A supplier commented that the proposed regulations are 
    unclear on two points. First, they do not indicate the point at which 
    Part A begins to cover transportation services and whether those 
    services provided before admission to the hospital are covered under 
    that Part or only those provided during the patient's hospital stay. 
    Second, the proposed regulations seem to indicate that if a patient's 
    stay in the hospital is covered by Part A, the ambulance service 
    provided before admission and at discharge would be part of the Part A 
    payment and could not be billed under Part B. If this is true, the 
    commenter believed that this is a change in policy that would destroy 
    many Part B ambulance services and be detrimental to hospitals.
        Response: The proposed revisions to the regulations were made 
    merely to clarify and restate current policy on the scope of benefits 
    under Parts A and B of Medicare, not to make any change in policy. To 
    explain the policy in this area, we must distinguish between
    
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    ambulance services, which are covered under Part B, and transportation 
    services, which are covered under Part A. The movement of a beneficiary 
    from his or her home, an accident scene, or any other point of origin 
    to the nearest hospital, critical care access hospital (CAH) (formally 
    known as a rural primary care hospital (RPCH)), or skilled nursing 
    facility (SNF) that is capable of furnishing the required level and 
    type of care for the beneficiary's illness or injury is covered, 
    assuming medical necessity and other coverage criteria are met, only 
    under Part B as an ambulance service. No Part A coverage is available 
    because, at the time the beneficiary is transported, he or she is not 
    an inpatient of any provider paid under Part A of the program. The 
    transfer of a beneficiary from one provider to another (for example, 
    from an acute care hospital to a long-term care hospital or to an SNF) 
    is also not covered as a Part A provider service because, at the time 
    the person is in transit, he or she is not a patient of either 
    provider. This service may be covered under Part B.
        However, once a beneficiary has been admitted to a hospital, CAH,or 
    SNF, it may be necessary to transport the beneficiary to another 
    hospital or other site for specialized care. In this instance, the 
    specialized services are furnished under arrangements made by the 
    hospital, CAH, or SNF. Following that treatment, the beneficiary is 
    returned to the hospital, CAH, or SNF to complete the inpatient stay. 
    This movement of the beneficiary is considered ``patient 
    transportation'' and is covered as an inpatient hospital or CAH service 
    under Part A of the program and as an SNF service when the SNF is 
    furnishing it as a covered SNF service, and Part A payment is made for 
    that service. Because the service is covered and payable as a 
    beneficiary transportation service under Part A, the service cannot be 
    classified and paid for as an ambulance service under Part B. This is 
    not a change from current policy, but has been the policy since the 
    inception of the Medicare program. In order to more clearly indicate 
    that ambulance services are covered under Part A when the beneficiary 
    is an inpatient of a hospital or CAH, we have revised the regulations 
    at Sec. 409.10 to include this service as a covered inpatient hospital 
    or CAH service. We have also revised Sec. 409.20 to include it as a SNF 
    covered service.
        We note that, as provided in Secs. 412.2(c)(5)(iii)(B) and 
    413.40(c)(2)(iii)(B), ambulance services are specifically excluded from 
    the preadmission payment window provisions applicable to hospital 
    inpatient services. That is, ambulance services furnished during the 3 
    days before the day of a beneficiary's admission to a hospital (or 1 
    day for hospitals excluded from the prospective payment system) may be 
    paid under Part B and are not considered inpatient hospital services.
    
    B. Medical Necessity
    
        Under current regulations, Medicare covers transportation provided 
    by an ambulance if the beneficiary must be transported by an ambulance 
    because other means of transportation are contraindicated. In the June 
    1997 proposed rule (62 FR 32719), we proposed that if a beneficiary is 
    ``bed-confined,'' other means of transportation would be presumed to be 
    contraindicated. We also proposed that ``bed-confined'' would be 
    defined as the inability to--
         Get up from bed without assistance;
         Ambulate; and
         Sit in a chair, including a wheelchair.
    
    We noted that we used this term synonymously with the terms 
    ``bedridden'' or ``stretcher-bound.'' However, it is not synonymous 
    with ``bed rest'' or ``nonambulatory.''
        In addition, nonemergency transportation would be covered only if, 
    before furnishing the service, the ambulance supplier obtained a 
    physician's written order certifying that the beneficiary must be 
    transported in an ambulance because other means of transportation are 
    contraindicated (Sec. 410.40(c)(2)). The physician's order must be 
    dated no more than 60 days before the date the service is furnished. We 
    received several comments on these proposed policies.
        Comment: A Medicare carrier and a national renal association 
    supported the definition of bed-confined as proposed. They believed 
    that the definition ensures that ambulance services will be provided 
    only to those individuals with the greatest need and the most severe 
    physical limitations.
        Response: We agree with the commenters. Our purpose in developing 
    this definition was to identify as eligible for covered ambulance 
    services only those individuals who are not able to be up and out of 
    bed under any condition and cannot tolerate other methods of 
    transportation.
        Comment: Three commenters stated that the definition of ``bed-
    confined'' as proposed is too restrictive and that the policy 
    eliminates transportation for many individuals who would ``in reality 
    have no other way of obtaining medical care.''
        Response: It is important to note that the Medicare law contains no 
    provisions for ``transportation,'' but rather provides for coverage of 
    ambulance services. Section 1861(s)(7) of the Act allows Medicare 
    coverage of ambulance services only when the use of other methods of 
    transportation is contraindicated by the beneficiary's condition. The 
    regulations reflect the intent expressed in the House Ways and Means 
    Committee and Senate Finance Committee reports on H.R. 6675, the 1965 
    Social Security Amendments (H. Rep. No. 213 at page 36 and S. Rep. No. 
    404 at page 43) that ambulance transportation be covered only if ``* * 
    * normal transportation would endanger the health of the patient * * 
    *'' Therefore, a patient whose condition permits transport in any type 
    of vehicle other than an ambulance would not qualify for ambulance 
    services under Medicare Part B.
        Comment: Seven ambulance suppliers stated that all factors relating 
    to the beneficiary's condition should be considered in evaluating if a 
    beneficiary has met the medical necessity criteria for ambulance 
    service. That is, bed-confinement should not be the sole criterion used 
    in determining medical necessity because it is only one factor. The 
    commenters suggested that suppliers should provide documentation on why 
    the beneficiary is bed-confined.
        Response: It is always the responsibility of the ambulance supplier 
    to furnish complete and accurate documentation to demonstrate that the 
    ambulance service being furnished meets the medical necessity criteria. 
    The fact that a definition of bed-confined has been adopted does not 
    suggest that bed-confinement is the sole determinant of medical 
    necessity nor does it relieve the supplier of his or her responsibility 
    to submit adequate information supporting the reason for a bed-
    confinement determination.
        Comment: Three ambulance suppliers disagreed that the proposed bed-
    confined definition should be synonymous with ``stretcher-bound.'' They 
    suggested that ``stretcher-bound'' refers to the beneficiary being 
    secured to the stretcher and not specifically to the condition of the 
    beneficiary. They asked that we clarify that stretcher-bound is not a 
    synonym for ``bed-confined.''
        Response: We agree with the commenters and will not use the term 
    ``stretcher-bound'' in describing the medical condition of the 
    beneficiary. We proposed a definition of ``bed-confined'' as a part of 
    our proposal to use ICD-9-CM medical condition codes. The ICD-9-CM list 
    set forth in the
    
    [[Page 3640]]
    
    proposed rule included the diagnosis code V49.8, Other Specified 
    Problems Influencing Health Status. We added a definition of bed-
    confined which could be used in conjunction with this code. As noted 
    above, we are not including the proposed medical necessity provision 
    based on ICD-9-CM codes in this final rule. However, as a result of 
    comments, as well as past questions, we have specified certain criteria 
    that must be met in order for ambulance services to be covered. In 
    accordance with Sec. 410.40(d), nonemergency ambulance transportation 
    would be covered if the beneficiary is unable to get up from bed 
    without assistance.
        Comment: One ambulance supplier commented that the proposed 
    definition will cause undue hardship for the beneficiary, family, 
    physician, and ambulance supplier because some beneficiaries are able 
    to sit in a wheelchair for brief periods of time, but cannot tolerate a 
    wheelchair for the period of time required for transport. Under the 
    proposed definition, ambulance transportation furnished to 
    beneficiaries such as these would not be covered.
        Response: If there are circumstances associated with the 
    beneficiary's condition that warrant the need for ambulance 
    transportation, the documentation submitted on behalf of that 
    beneficiary should reflect the condition and support the need for the 
    services. That documentation will then be considered by the carrier in 
    processing the claim.
        Comment: Several ambulance suppliers and a national ambulance 
    association commented that the proposed definition of ``bed-confined'' 
    is too narrow and that most beneficiaries who can ``technically sit in 
    a chair or wheelchair momentarily'' or be ``restrained'' to a chair or 
    wheelchair would not meet the definition and would therefore be denied 
    ambulance services. They also expressed the belief that the definition 
    should be based on the condition of the beneficiary at the time of 
    transport rather than any period before or after the transport. One of 
    the commenters suggested that it is not safe to transport someone in a 
    wheelchair who must be restrained in order to travel. To ensure that 
    the definition allows those beneficiaries who are bed-confined to 
    receive ambulance benefits, commenters suggested the following 
    revisions for the definition of ``bed-confined'':
         Add the phrase ``without assistance'' to the second and 
    third criteria of the proposed definition.
         Add the phrase ``* * * the inability to ride in a moving 
    vehicle without being restrained to that chair'' to the last criterion.
         Revise the third criterion to read ``* * * the inability 
    to sit for an extended period of time in a chair or wheelchair, without 
    restraint.''
         The phrase ``without assistance'' should be removed from 
    the first criterion and the ``and'' be replaced with ``or'' so that if 
    any one of the criteria is met, the beneficiary would be determined to 
    be ``bed-confined.''
        Response: In developing the proposed definition, it was our intent 
    to describe clearly individuals who are completely confined to bed and 
    unable to tolerate any activity out of bed. We recognize that it is 
    standard and accepted medical practice in both hospitals and nursing 
    homes to take steps to ensure that beneficiaries are up and out of bed 
    as often as their condition permits. Such beneficiaries are not bed-
    confined. It is incumbent upon health care professionals responsible 
    for the care of individual beneficiaries to determine what is safe for 
    those beneficiaries. If it is determined that it is unsafe for a 
    particular beneficiary to be unmonitored during transport, then the 
    documentation submitted for that particular transport should support 
    the need for ambulance transportation. That documentation will be 
    considered by the carrier in processing the claim.
        We considered whether it would be appropriate to include a time-
    frame with respect to the ``bed-confined'' definition. That is, adding 
    a phrase such as `'for more than 10 minutes'' to the various criteria. 
    Because of the difficulty associated with obtaining accurate 
    information related to how long an individual may have been out of bed 
    as well as the difficulty associated with efforts to substantiate such 
    information, we determined that it would be inappropriate to employ the 
    use of absolute terms if we did not intend to identify a means by which 
    a time factor could be measured.
        We do not believe it is necessary to make the proposed revisions on 
    the basis that the proposed definition encompasses the variations 
    requested by the commenters. We will however, revise the definition to 
    clarify that all three components must be met in order for the patient 
    to meet the requirements of the definition of ``bed-confined''.
        Comment: A national ambulance association stated that because we 
    did not define ``emergency'' and ``nonemergency'' in the proposed rule, 
    ambulance suppliers will not know when physician certification is 
    needed. The association does, however, support the need for physician 
    certification, in 60-day intervals, for repetitive transports. They 
    recommended the following definition for repetitive patients:
        ``Multiple scheduled treatments (for example, dialysis or radiation 
    therapy treatments) for the same diagnosis that requires ambulance 
    transportation over an extended period of time.''
        Response: The applicable definition that we use to define emergency 
    services is the definition set forth in section 1861(v)(1)(K)(ii) of 
    the act, which defines the term ``bona fide emergency services.'' This 
    definition provides that an emergency service is one that is provided 
    after the sudden onset of a medical condition manifesting itself by 
    acute sysmptoms of sufficient severity such that the absence of 
    immediate medical attention could reasonably be expected to result in 
    placing the beneficiary's health in serious jeopardy; serious 
    impairment to bodily functions; or serious dysfunction of any bodily 
    organ or part. Any ambulance transportation service that does not meet 
    these criteria would be a nonemergency service. This would include all 
    scheduled transports (regardless of origin and destination), as well as 
    transports to SNFs or to the beneficiary's residence. Medically 
    necessary transports to and from dialysis facilities are scheduled and, 
    therefore, are nonemergency ambulance services.
        Comment: Four ambulance suppliers commended that the physician 
    certification requirement should not apply to beneficiaries who reside 
    at home or in facilities where they are not directly under the care of 
    a physician.
        Response: We agree that suppliers may often be unable to obtain the 
    appropriate physician certificate for these patients for a unscheduled 
    transport. We will revise the final regulations to provide that the 
    physician certification will be required for these beneficiaries for 
    scheduled, repetitive transports and scheduled, nonrepetitive 
    transports because we can assume that beneficiaries who are scheduled 
    for medical appointments are under a physician's care. In addition, for 
    beneficiaries who reside in a facility and are under a physician's 
    care, there should be little difficulty in obtaining the certificate 
    for unscheduled transports. For nonemergency, unscheduled 
    transportation of beneficiaries residing at home or in facilities were 
    they are not under the direct care of a physician, the physician 
    certification requirement will not apply.
        Comment: Several commenters, including an Emergency Medical 
    Services (EMS) Director, stated that nonscheduled, nonemergency 
    transports
    
    [[Page 3641]]
    
    should be judged on their medical necessity and therefore exempt from 
    the bed-confined requirement and that, to avoid unnecessary delays, it 
    would be appropriate to obtain the physician certification with 48 
    hours after the ambulance service was furnished. The commenters do 
    support use of a physician certification for those patients needing 
    repetitive transports to receive specialized services.
        Response: After considering the arguments and observations made by 
    commenters, we concluded that we should proceed with our proposal to 
    require physician certification for all nonemergency transports, both 
    scheduled and unscheduled, except for the revisions discussed in the 
    previous response to comments concerning beneficiaries who are not 
    living in a facility directly under a physician's care. Nonemergency 
    ambulance service is a Medicare service furnished to a beneficiary for 
    whom a physician is responsible; therefore, the physician is 
    responsible for the medical necessity determination. The physician 
    certification requirement will help to ensure that the claims submitted 
    for ambulance services are reasonable and necessary, because other 
    methods of transportation are contraindicated. We believe that this 
    requirement will help to avoid Medicare payment for unnecessary 
    ambulance services that are not medically necessary even though they 
    may be desirable to beneficiaries. However, we agree with the 
    commenters that, to avoid unnecessary delays, for unscheduled 
    transports, the required documentation can be obtained within 48 hours 
    after the ambulance transportation service has been furnished. That is, 
    it is not necessary that the ambulance suppliers have the physician 
    certification in hand prior to furnishing the service. While it is 
    reasonable to expect that an ambulance supplier could obtain 
    pretransport physician certification for routine, scheduled trips, it 
    is less reasonable to impose such a requirement on unscheduled 
    transports. Therefore, we have revised the final regulations to reflect 
    this change.
        Comment: Two ambulance suppliers commented that physicians are 
    unaware of the coverage requirements for ambulance services and that 
    their decisions to request ambulance services may be based on ``family 
    preference or the inability to safely transport the beneficiary by 
    other means rather than on the medical necessity requirement imposed by 
    Medicare.''
        Response: Section 1861(s)(7) of the Act allows for Medicare 
    coverage of ambulance services only when the use of other methods of 
    transportation is contraindicated by the beneficiary's condition. If 
    the ability to safely transport the beneficiary, given the 
    beneficiary's condition, is at issue, then the supplier may obtain from 
    the physician the necessary documentation supporting the reason for the 
    transportation. If the decision to use ambulance services is based on 
    the convenience of the beneficiary, the beneficiary's family, the 
    beneficiary's physician, or some other element of personal preference, 
    Medicare coverage is not available.
        To facilitate awareness of the Medicare rules as they relate to the 
    ambulance service benefit, ambulance suppliers may need to educate the 
    physician (or the physician's staff members) when making arrangements 
    for the ambulance transportation of a beneficiary. Suppliers may wish 
    to furnish an explanation of applicable medical necessity requirements 
    as well as requirements for physician certification and to explain that 
    the certification statement should indicate that the ambulance services 
    being requested by the attending physician are medically necessary.
    
    C. Origins and Destinations
    
        In the proposed rule, we added a provision that allowed coverage of 
    round-trip ambulance transportation for an ESRD beneficiary living at 
    home to the nearest treatment facility capable of furnishing the 
    necessary dialysis service regardless of whether the dialysis facility 
    is located at a hospital. We currently cover the ambulance services 
    only if the beneficiary is transported to a hospital-based facility for 
    dialysis.
        Comment: Several commenters, including a consortium of EMS 
    Directors, renal associations, and dialysis facilities, believed that 
    the proposed change concerning transportation to the nearest dialysis 
    facility is not in the best interest of the beneficiary and that it 
    will have an impact on the continuity of beneficiary care. That is, 
    beneficiaries who have been receiving dialysis at the nearest hospital-
    based treatment facility may now be forced to go to another, closer 
    nonhospital treatment facility. The commenters recommended that we 
    allow for transport to the nearest facility where there is an 
    ``existing, established beneficiary care relationship'' and the 
    facility has an ``available bed.''
        Response: While we were developing the proposed regulation, 
    concerns were raised by representatives of the renal community that the 
    current policy was detrimental to beneficiaries with ESRD because it 
    forced some of them to travel great distances to a hospital for 
    dialysis when the same services were available closer to their homes. 
    In response to these concerns, we proposed to allow coverage of 
    ambulance services to the nearest appropriate dialysis facility. This 
    policy is consistent with our general ambulance policy, set forth in 
    section 2120.3.F of the MCM, for emergency services which, in general, 
    limits payment for otherwise covered ambulance transportation services 
    to the nearest facility capable of furnishing care.
        If the closest dialysis facility is not able to perform the type of 
    treatment the beneficiary requires or is unable to accommodate the 
    beneficiary for another reason, for example, lack of capacity, then 
    Medicare will pay for the beneficiary to be transported to the more 
    distant facility. It is, of course, the prerogative of the beneficiary 
    to choose the facility where he or she wishes to be treated. If the 
    beneficiary decides to be transported to a facility farther away, and 
    it is determined that the nearer facility was capable of providing the 
    required type and level of care, Medicare payment for the ambulance 
    service is limited to the amount that would have been paid to transport 
    the beneficiary to the nearest appropriate dialysis facility.
        Comment: Three ambulance suppliers commented that we should 
    consider paying for other forms of transportation for ESRD 
    beneficiaries.
        Response: As noted above, the only transportation service covered 
    by Medicare is that set forth at section 1861(s)(7) of the Act. That 
    section allows Medicare coverage for ambulance services only when the 
    use of other methods of transportation are contraindicated by the 
    beneficiary's condition. We believe Congress made a distinction between 
    ``transportation by ambulance'' and ``normal transportation.'' We 
    believe Congress intended, by this distinction that Medicare coverage 
    be limited to ambulance services for beneficiaries who could not reach 
    care any other way. Thus, a beneficiary whose condition permits 
    transfer in any vehicle other than ambulance would not qualify for 
    Medicare Part B payment.
        Comment: A State ambulance association and a hospital-based 
    ambulance provider commented that the proposed change for ESRD 
    beneficiaries will increase the number of transports and the incidence 
    of fraud and abuse.
        Response: The proposed change in the policy for ESRD beneficiaries 
    does not expand the coverage of transportation for these beneficiaries; 
    it merely changes the allowable destinations for dialysis
    
    [[Page 3642]]
    
    treatment. We concluded the transporting ESRD beneficiaries from their 
    residence to the nearest appropriate dialysis facility to receive 
    medically necessary dialysis services could result in a cost savings to 
    the Medicare program through the substitution of shorter trips for 
    unnecessarily long trips and, in some cases, ambulance trips to distant 
    hospital-based facilities to obtain dialysis. This modification, 
    coupled with the 60-day physician certification requirement for 
    nonemergency, scheduled ambulance transports and the medical necessity 
    determination, provides limitations that should prevent inappropriate 
    coverage of ambulance services furnished to ESRD beneficiaries. 
    Therefore, we anticipate that this revision to the Medicare ambulance 
    services policy will not result in an increased number of transports or 
    an increase in the incidence of fraud and abuse.
        Comment: Three ambulance suppliers commented that, in order to 
    decrease the burden on local emergency rooms and to provide most cost-
    effective service, HCFA should consider expanding the allowable 
    destinations for ambulances transportation to include physician's 
    offices, urgent care facilities, and freestanding radiological 
    facilities. In support of this recommendation, one supplier indicated 
    that the Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1980 (Public Law 96-499) 
    specifically covered ambulance transportation to freestanding 
    radiological facilities.
        Response: Although we proposed to allow ESRD beneficiaries residing 
    at home to receive medically necessary ambulance transportation to the 
    nearest appropriate dialysis facility, even if that facility is not 
    hospital-based, we are not proposing to extend ambulance coverage for 
    transport to other facilities or for other populations of 
    beneficiaries. In making our decision to expand the destination sites 
    for ESRD beneficiaries, we considered the fact that many beneficiaries 
    who are confined to home may have a broader range of needs on a routine 
    basis, such as visits to the physician, for which they might wish to 
    have ambulance transportation could be available. However, an expansion 
    of this type would be difficult to monitor to ensure that the ambulance 
    services benefit was being used only for medically necessary 
    transportation where all other means of transportation were 
    unacceptable. Without built-in limitations (for example, routinely 
    requiring the use of physician certifications) and extensive rules for 
    determining when the need for medical services justifies coverage of 
    ambulance transportation, the ambulance services benefit could easily 
    become a benefit for general transportation services, which would be 
    inconsistent with Congressional intent and program history.
        It is also important to note that, generally, Medicare does not 
    provide coverage for ambulance transportation to a physician's office, 
    for example, transportation to a physician's office for a follow-up 
    visit with an attending physician. There are two exceptions to this 
    rule. First, under Medicare Part A, we cover ambulance transportation 
    of hospital or SNF inpatients to the nearest appropriate treatment 
    facility including a physician's office to obtain medically necessary 
    diagnostic or therapeutic services not available at the institution 
    where the beneficiary is an inpatient. This exception may be applied 
    only if the services cannot reasonably be brought to the beneficiary or 
    the cost of transporting the beneficiary is less than the cost of 
    bringing the services to the beneficiary. Second, if while transporting 
    a beneficiary to a hospital, the ambulance stops at a physician's 
    office because of the beneficiary's dire need for professional 
    attention, and, immediately thereafter, the ambulance continues to the 
    hospital, Medicare coverage may be available.
        The House Report of the Committee on the Budget that accompanied 
    Public Law 96-499 did recommend that we consider including coverage of 
    round-trip ambulance transportation for beneficiaries in SNFs or 
    confined to their homes to obtain medically necessary radiological 
    services furnished in a nonhospital setting. However, the suggestion to 
    provide coverage for round-trip ambulance transportation services to 
    freestanding radiological facilities was not included in the final 
    provisions of the law.
    
    D. Requirements for Ambulance Suppliers
    
    1. Vehicles
        We proposed that any vehicle used as an ambulance must be designed 
    and equipped to respond to medical emergencies and, in nonemergency 
    situations, be capable of transporting beneficiaries with acute medical 
    conditions. The vehicle must also comply with all applicable State and 
    local laws governing the licensing and certification of an emergency 
    medical transportation vehicle. In addition, we proposed that, at a 
    minimum, the ambulance must contain a stretcher, linens, emergency 
    medical supplies, oxygen equipment, and other lifesaving emergency 
    medical equipment and be equipped with emergency warning lights, 
    sirens, and two-way telecommunications.
        Comment: Several ambulance suppliers commented that requiring 
    ``two-way telecommunications'' is unnecessary, cost prohibitive, and 
    not practical for rural areas. One commenter suggested that the 
    requirement be revised to state, ``* * * be equipped with 
    telecommunications equipment as required by State or local law, to 
    include, at a minimum, one two-way voice radio or wireless telephone.''
        Response: We agree that the commenter's alternative will satisfy 
    our needs for safety and efficiency. We have decided, therefore, that 
    we will adopt the commenter's suggestion.
        Comment: Three ambulance suppliers commented that the reference to 
    ``lifesaving equipment'' is vague. One commenter suggested that we 
    specifically enumerate the ALS equipment required.
        Response: It is our intent to defer to State or local requirements 
    where vehicle equipment and personnel certification requirements are 
    concerned. In addition, a review of the proposal reflects an 
    inadvertent omission of the phrase ``* * * as required by State or 
    local law''; therefore, Sec. 410.41(a) will be revised accordingly.
    2. Vehicle Staff
        We proposed staffing requirements at both the BLS and ALS level of 
    service. As proposed, a BLS vehicle would have to be staffed by at 
    least two persons, each trained to provide first aid and certified as 
    an emergency medical technician-basic (EMT-B) by the State or local 
    authority where the services are furnished and legally authorized to 
    operate all lifesaving equipment on board the vehicle.
        An ALS vehicle would need to include at least two persons: one 
    person trained to provide basic first aid at the EMT-B level and one 
    person trained and certified as a paramedic or emergency medical 
    technician-advance (EMT-A) who is also trained and certified to perform 
    one or more ALS services. The EMT-A or paramedic would have had to be 
    certified by the State in which the services are furnished and legally 
    authorized to operate all lifesaving equipment on board the vehicle.
        Comment: Several ambulance suppliers commented that the proposed 
    staffing requirements are contrary to existing State standards and the 
    proposed requirement that a BLS ambulance be staffed with two EMTs
    
    [[Page 3643]]
    
    would have a detrimental effect on volunteer companies. The commenters 
    recommended that we revise the staffing requirements to defer to State 
    or local requirements for ambulance staffing. Many comments pointed out 
    that the State EMS offices set the minimum staffing level requirements.
        Response: We agree with the commenters that it is sufficient for 
    Medicare purposes if the BLS vehicle staffing meets the State and local 
    laws. Based on a review of the comments, we acknowledge that a 
    requirement for a minimum of two EMTs, as proposed, has the potential 
    of placing considerable burden on volunteer ambulance services and may 
    possibly lead to the elimination of such services, particularly in 
    rural areas. We will revise the regulations accordingly.
        Comment: Three suppliers requested that we define the following 
    terms: EMT-A, EMT-B, and paramedic.
        Response: Based on comments received in response to the proposed 
    regulation, we acknowledge that the terms EMT-A and EMT-B are no longer 
    used by the EMS industry; thus, we are deleting reference to EMT-A and 
    EMT-B. We will, however, maintain our proposed requirement that if an 
    ALS staff member is authorized, under State or local laws, to operate 
    as an ALS crew member, then the EMT must be certified to perform one or 
    more ALS services. The term ``paramedic'' is defined by State and local 
    laws.
    3. Billing and Reporting Requirements
        In the proposed rule, we stated that we would require ambulance 
    suppliers to use the HCFA Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) codes 
    to describe the origin and destination of ambulance trips. We also 
    proposed that, at the carrier's request, a supplier would complete and 
    submit an ambulance supplier form established by HCFA and provide the 
    carrier with documentation of the supplier's compliance with State and 
    local emergency vehicle and staff licensure and certification 
    requirements. In addition, suppliers would be required to provide any 
    information requested by the carrier for purposes of documenting the 
    ambulance supplier's compliance with the regulations and to support 
    claims processing.
        Comment: A majority of the commenters objected to the proposed 
    billing and reporting requirements on the ground that they are unfunded 
    mandates that are burdensome and in excess of the informational updates 
    required at the State or local level. They also believe that the 
    carriers should not be allowed unlimited access to records, many of 
    which are protected under other Federal laws and regulations.
        Response: Current Medicare instructions (section 2120.1 of the MCM) 
    require ambulance suppliers to submit a statement and other documentary 
    evidence that their vehicles and personnel meet all of the requirements 
    set by State or local authorities. The guideline specifies that, in 
    addition to the submission of documentary evidence, the statement 
    should describe the equipment and beneficiary care items with which the 
    vehicles are equipped, the extent of first-aid training acquired by 
    personnel staffing those vehicles and the supplier's agreement to 
    notify the carrier of any changes in operation that would affect the 
    coverage of the supplier's ambulance services. Our intent in proposing 
    that suppliers complete a HCFA-developed Ambulance Supplier Form was to 
    promote consistency in the collection of this already-required 
    information as well as make it easier for suppliers by providing them 
    with a preprinted form to complete.
        Current guidelines also specify that when the required information 
    is not submitted or whenever there is a question about the supplier's 
    compliance with the requirements, the carrier should take appropriate 
    action. The appropriate action may include conducting an on-site visit 
    as well as requesting additional information. We disagree with 
    commenters that the proposed requirement allow unlimited access to 
    protected records. This requirement formalizes, in a consistent format, 
    an informational requirement that has been in effect for several years.
        Based on comments, we will revise the final regulations to clarify 
    that, upon carriers' request, suppliers will be required to submit 
    additional information and documentation as it relates to vehicle and 
    personnel operations. That is, suppliers will not be required to 
    automatically submit information and documentation for each new vehicle 
    that is purchased or crew member that is hired.
        Comment: Several suppliers stated that verification of compliance 
    information should be obtained from State databases and not directly 
    from the ambulance supplier.
        Response: To coordinate the transfer of information between various 
    State computer systems and the systems used by our Medicare contractors 
    could present administrative problems for the State as well as the 
    carrier. We would also need to take into consideration system 
    capabilities, compatibility, and the potential cost to the State, 
    carrier, HCFA, and the supplier. We are not requiring the submission of 
    documentation that is inconsistent with information suppliers are 
    already required to report to the State or local authority. This 
    provision requires suppliers to complete the standardized Ambulance 
    Supplier Form and to photocopy documentation already in their 
    possession.
        Comment: One ambulance supplier commented that the Ambulance 
    Supplier Form appears to contradict the information provided in the 
    HCFA-855, Medicare Provider/Supplier Enrollment form. The supplier 
    questioned whether the State ambulance license will be acceptable in 
    lieu of vehicle and staffing information required on the HCFA-855 
    application.
        Response: The HCFA-855 is required to be completed by all providers 
    and suppliers who wish to enroll in the Medicare program (except for 
    those who are required to enroll through the survey and certification 
    process). The information being requested on that form is used to 
    determine eligibility and to make proper payments under the Medicare 
    program. Attachment 2 of the HCFA-855 Enrollment Application form 
    indicates that, ``If you are licensed by your State as an Ambulance 
    Supply Service, you are not required to submit the information on the 
    supplier form Attachment 2.'' The information that Attachment 2 
    requires related to vehicle descriptions for each vehicle including 
    specifying the type of vehicle, license number, and the list of first-
    aid, ALS equipment, if applicable, safety and other care items. Even in 
    instances where a supplier does complete the Ambulance Supplier Form 
    shown in the attachment, because the service is not licensed by the 
    State, the company would still be required to submit to the carrier 
    evidence of recertification. This is the same requirement imposed on 
    suppliers who are State licensed. The enrollment form instructions 
    specify that evidence of vehicle and personnel recertification must be 
    submitted to the carrier on an ongoing basis and that copies of 
    applicable certificates and licenses should be included. This 
    instruction guideline is applicable to all ambulance service suppliers.
        In conclusion, the proposed billing and reporting requirements, 
    which require submission of the Ambulance Supplier Form, are not new 
    requirements. This form is the method by which suppliers will submit 
    evidence of vehicle and crew recertification. The form was developed to 
    provide a consistent format for the collection of verification of 
    compliance
    
    [[Page 3644]]
    
    information currently required by Medicare instructional guidelines.
    
    V. Paramedic Intercept Provisions of the BBA
    
        Paramedic intercept services are ALS services delivered by 
    paramedics who operate separately from the agency that provides the 
    ambulance transport. This type of service is most often provided for an 
    emergency ambulance transport in which a local volunteer ambulance that 
    can provide only BLS-level service is dispatched to transport a 
    beneficiary. If the beneficiary needs ALS services, such as EKG 
    monitoring, chest decompression, or IV therapy, another agency, 
    typically a hospital or proprietary emergency medical service, 
    dispatches a paramedic to meet the BLS ambulance at the scene or en 
    route to the hospital. The ALS paramedics then provide their services 
    to the beneficiary.
        This tiered approach to life-saving may be cost effective in many 
    areas because most volunteer ambulances do not charge for their 
    service, and one paramedic service can cover many communities. Under 
    current policy, Medicare payment may be made for these services only 
    when the claim is submitted by the ambulance provider (that is, the 
    actual transporting ambulance unit). Payment cannot be made directly to 
    the intercept service supplier because there is no benefit category in 
    the Medicare statute for the intercept service itself. With the limited 
    exception provided in section 4531(c) of the BBA (discussed below), the 
    only statutory basis for covering these services is under section 
    1861(s)(7) of the Act, as an integral part of the ambulance 
    transportation benefit. In a jurisdiction that prohibits volunteer 
    ambulances from billing Medicare and other health insurance, the 
    intercept service cannot be paid for treating a Medicare beneficiary 
    and is forced to bill the beneficiary for the intercept service.
        Section 4531(c) of the BBA provided that the Secretary could 
    include limited coverage of these intercept services provided in a 
    rural area; that is, payment may be made directly to the agency 
    providing the paramedic service. However, the services could be covered 
    only if they are provided under contract with one or more volunteer 
    ambulance services and they are medically necessary based on the 
    condition of the beneficiary receiving the ambulance service. In 
    addition, the volunteer ambulance service involved must meet all of the 
    following requirements:
         Be certified as qualified to provide ambulance services 
    for purposes of this provision.
         Provide only BLS services at the time of the intercept.
         Be prohibited by State law from billing for any service. 
    Finally, the entity providing the ALS paramedic intercept service must 
    meet the following requirements:
         Be certified as qualified to provide the services under 
    the Medicare program.
         Bill all Recipients who receive ALS paramedic intercept 
    services from the entity, regardless of whether or not those recipients 
    are Medicare Beneficiaries.
        We are revising Sec. 410.40 to include these provisions. We are 
    defining rural area in the same way it is defined for purposes of the 
    Medicare hospital inpatient prospective payment system under section 
    1886(d)(2)(D) of the Act and in regulations at Sec. 412.62(f). A rural 
    area is any area outside of a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) or 
    New England County Metropolitan Area (NECMA) as defined by the Office 
    of Management and Budget. (Please see Tables 4A and 4B in the final 
    rule in the July 31, 1998 Federal Register entitled, Health Care 
    Financing Administration, Medicare Program; Changes to the Hospital 
    Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems and Fiscal Year 1999 Rates; Final 
    Rule.)
        Although it provided the Secretary with the authority to cover ALS 
    paramedic intercept services under certain conditions, section 4531(c) 
    of the BBA did not specify what the payment should be for those 
    services. We considered three different methods of payment for these 
    services.
        First, we considered paying the full ALS payment rate. We discussed 
    the issued with several ambulance companies that furnish paramedic 
    intercept services, that believe that the total cost of providing these 
    services is virtually the same as that of providing the full ALS 
    ambulance service. In addition, because these services are furnished in 
    rural areas, there is a low utilization rate that raises their cost per 
    service. That is, the paramedic intercept service has the same fixed 
    costs as ambulance company (i.e., flycar vehicle, life saving 
    equipment, labor and overhead) but these costs are spread over only 2 
    or 3 calls per day, whereas the typical ALS ambulance company has 30 to 
    40 calls per day.
        A second option would be to pay for intercept services based on the 
    difference between the ALS ambulance service rate and the BLS ambulance 
    service rate. This would Place a value on the intercept service 
    consistent with the fact that the full ALS service is comprised of two 
    components: the intercept service and a transport service. The 
    transport would be valued at the BLS rate and the intercept service 
    would be valued as the difference between the ALS rate and the BLS 
    rate.
        Finally, we could pay the average salary of a paramedic multiplied 
    by the average amount of time involved for an intercept service. While 
    this option would cover the costs associated with the paramedic's 
    services during an intercept, it would not recognize other costs such 
    as standby time, the vehicle used by the paramedics, medical equipment 
    carried on that vehicle, and other overhead expenses.
        After examining these options, we believe the best option would be 
    the second option; that is, pay the difference between the ALS payment 
    rate and the BLS payment rate. If we were to pay the full ALS rate, we 
    would be recognizing the intercept service as virtually equivalent to 
    the full ALS ambulance service. However, the ALS ambulance service is 
    actually equivalent to a paramedic intercept service plus a transport 
    service. We do not believe that it is appropriate to price a component 
    of the ALS service at the same rate as the total ALS service. However, 
    to pay only the costs of the paramedics' services does not recognize 
    the additional costs associated with furnishing the BLS service.
        We believe the second option balances considerations for access to 
    care and consistency with current ambulance payment policy. We would be 
    providing the intercept company with a reasonable payment while not 
    providing the same amount of payment that we would to an ambulance 
    company that provides both the transport and the paramedic service. If 
    we pay the difference between the ALS and BLS rates to the intercept 
    company, we would be acknowledging the BLS rate that would have been 
    paid to the volunteer company had it been permitted to bill the program 
    for the transport.
    
    VI. Provisions of the Final Regulations
    
        Other than the changes made to implement section 4531(c) of the 
    BBA, those provisions of this final rule that differ from the proposed 
    rule are as follows:
         We are revising Secs. 409.10 and 409.20 to clarify that 
    ambulance services are covered under Medicare Part A as hospital, CAH, 
    and SNF inpatient services.
         We have revised the medical necessity requirements in 
    Sec. 410.40(d) to specify when a beneficiary can be determined to be 
    bed-confined and,
    
    [[Page 3645]]
    
    thus, potentially eligible for ambulance services.
         We have revised the physician certification requirements 
    for nonemergency, unscheduled ambulance services in Sec. 410.40(d). In 
    cases where a beneficiary requires a nonemergency, unscheduled 
    ambulance transport, the written physician certificate can be obtained 
    48 hours after the ambulance transportation has been furnished. We are 
    also revising the regulations to provide that in situations where 
    nonemergency, unscheduled ambulance transportation is required for 
    beneficiaries residing at home (private residence) or in facilities 
    where they are not under the direct care of a physician, the physician 
    certification will not be required.
         We have revised the provision in Sec. 410.41(a) that 
    identifies the minimum equipment required on a vehicle used as an 
    ambulance, to require that a vehicle used as an ambulance must be 
    equipped with telecommunication equipment as required by State or local 
    law, to include, at a minimum, one two-way voice radio or wireless 
    telephone.
         We have revised Sec. 410.41(b), which established minimum 
    vehicle staffing requirements for both the BLS and ALS level of 
    service. For BLS vehicles, we require that, at a minimum, the staff 
    must meet staffing requirements established by State or local 
    authorities. For ALS vehicles, we have revised this provision to delete 
    reference to EMT-A and EMT-B designations.
    
    VII. Collection of Information Requirements
    
        Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we are required to 
    provide 60-day notice in the Federal Register and solicit public 
    comment before a collection of information requirement is submitted to 
    the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval. In 
    order to fairly evaluate whether an information collection should be 
    approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork Reduction Act 
    requires that we solicit comment on the following issues:
         Whether the information collection is necessary and useful 
    to carry out the proper functions of our agency.
         The accuracy of our estimate of the information collection 
    burden.
         The quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be 
    collected.
         Recommendations to minimize the information collection 
    burden on the affected public, including automated collection 
    techniques.
    
    Section 410.40  Coverage of Ambulance Services
    
        The information collection requirements in Sec. 410.40 require the 
    ambulance supplier to obtain written certification from the 
    beneficiary's attending physician certifying that the medical necessity 
    requirements of paragraph (d)(1) of this section are met, before 
    furnishing non-emergency, scheduled ambulance services. The physician's 
    order must be dated no earlier than 60 days before the date the service 
    is furnished. And, for nonemergency, unscheduled ambulance services for 
    a resident of a facility who is under the care of a physician, the 
    ambulance supplier must obtain the written certification, within 48 
    hours after the transport, from the beneficiary's attending physician 
    certifying that the medical necessity requirements of paragraph (d)(1) 
    of this section are met.
        The requirement for the physician's certification does not require 
    a particular form or format and can be simply a written statement to 
    describe the beneficiary's condition that supports the need for 
    ambulance services. Some suppliers have developed their own physician 
    certification forms. We estimate that a physician's certification could 
    take, on average, 10 minutes of the physician's time per beneficiary 
    and, in cases involving repetitive transports, one certificate could be 
    used by the supplier for a 60-day period. The following chart shows the 
    potential paperwork burden that may be imposed on physicians by this 
    final rule.
    
                                        Estimated Paperwork Burden on Physicians
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                Estimated annual
                                               number of ambulance                          Estimated total annual
                                               trips per supplier     Estimated average    burden for all physicians
                   CFR Section                  (9,000 suppliers)    time in minutes to   combined  (9,000  x  3,000
                                                    requiring           complete each      certificates per supplier
                                                  certification     statement  (Minutes)    x  10 minutes)  (Hours)
                                                   statements
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    410.40(d)(2) & (3)(i)...................                 3,000                    10                   4,500,000
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In addition, suppliers will be required to retain all physician 
    certifications on file and make the certifications available upon 
    request by the Medicare carrier or intermediary. The burden associated 
    with this requirement is the time required for the supplier to retain 
    the physician certification. We estimate that this could take, on 
    average, 2 minutes to file each physician certification. Given that we 
    estimate 3,000 certifications per year, the total burden associated 
    with these requirements is 6,000 minutes or 100 annual hours, per 
    supplier. The total burden imposed by the requirements of this section 
    are 4,500,000 hours for all physicians and (9,000  x  100 hours record 
    keeping) 900,000 hours for suppliers. This paperwork burden requirement 
    will impact all physicians. We estimate that there are 500,000 
    physicians. Total burden hours imposed on physicians times $15 (the 
    estimated hourly cost for an administrative employee to complete the 
    form, less the attending physician's signature) equals an additional 
    cost of $67.5 million for physicians and a cost of $9 million for 
    ambulance suppliers.
    
    Section 410.41  Requirements for ambulance suppliers
    
        This section requires an ambulance supplier to bill for ambulance 
    services using HCFA-designated procedure codes to describe origin and 
    destination and indicate on the claims form that the physician 
    certification is on file and available for review upon request by the 
    Medicare carrier or intermediary. The burden associated with this 
    requirement is captured during the completion of the HCFA 1500/1491 
    common claim file form, approved under OMB number 0938-0008. Therefore, 
    we are assigning one token-hour of burden for this requirement.
        This section also requires, upon a carrier's request, an ambulance 
    supplier to complete and return the attached Ambulance Supplier Form 
    and to submit documentation of emergency vehicle and staff licensure 
    and certification requirements in keeping with State and local laws to 
    the Medicare carrier.
        This requires completion of the Ambulance Supplier Form, 
    photocopying documentation already required by State or local laws and 
    in
    
    [[Page 3646]]
    
    the possession of the supplier, and sending those copies, along with 
    the completed form to the carrier. We will require ambulance suppliers 
    to complete the Ambulance Supplier Form on an annual basis or in 
    keeping with licensure or certification requirements established by 
    State or local laws. It is our understanding that an overwhelming 
    number of States require ambulance supplier licensure or certification 
    renewal on an annual basis.
        Our decision no to state a specific time frame, for example 
    requiring annual submission of the documentation, in which ambulance 
    suppliers will be required to submit the form took into consideration 
    the potential burden on those suppliers operating in areas with renewal 
    requirements other than on an annual basis. It is estimated that the 
    time to complete this form is no more than 32 minutes.
        The following chart shows the potential paperwork burden that may 
    be imposed on ambulance suppliers by this final rule.
    
                   Estimated Annual Supplier Reporting Burden
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                     Estimated      Estimated     Estimated
                                       no. of    average burden     annual
             CFR Sections            ambulance    per response      burden
                                     suppliers      (Minutes)      (Hours)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    410.41(c)(2) ambulance
     supplier form and
     documentation................        9,000              32        4,530
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        We have submitted a copy of this final rule to OMB for its review 
    of the information collection requirements in Secs. 410.40 and 410.41. 
    The information collection requirements are not effective until they 
    have been approved by OMB. A notice will be published in the Federal 
    Register when approval is obtained.
        If you comment on these information collection and record keeping 
    requirements, or the attached form, please mail copies directly to the 
    following:
    
    Health Care Financing Administration, Office of Information Services, 
    Security and Standards Group, Division of HCFA Enterprise Standards, 
    Room C2-26-17, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850, Attn: 
    John Burke, HCFA-1813-FC, or
    Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and 
    Budget, Room 10235, New Executive Office Building, Washington, DC 
    20503, Attn: Allison Herron Eydt, HCFA Desk Officer
    
    VIII. Regulatory Impact Statement
    
        Consistent with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 
    through 612), we prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis unless the 
    Secretary certifies that a rule will not have a significant economic 
    impact on a substantial number of small entities. For purposes of the 
    RFA, all suppliers of ambulance services are considered to be small 
    entities. Individuals, carriers, and States are not considered to be 
    ``small entities.''
        In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act requires the Secretary to 
    prepare a regulatory impact analysis if a rule may have a significant 
    impact on the operations of a substantial number of small rural 
    hospitals. This analysis must conform to the provisions of section 604 
    of the RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we define a 
    small rural hospital as a hospital that is located outside of a 
    Metropolitan Statistical Area and has fewer than 50 beds.
        As illustrated below, the impact of this regulation does not meet 
    the criteria under Executive Order 12866 to require a regulatory impact 
    analysis; however, the following information, together with information 
    provided elsewhere in this preamble, constitutes a voluntary analysis 
    and meets the requirements of the RFA.
        First, this final rule was initiated partly because of the concern 
    over the rapid increase in the cost to the Medicare program for 
    furnishing ambulance services to beneficiaries. This rapid increase in 
    expenditures can be attributed to a variety of causes that include the 
    following:
         High costs for equipment, supplies, and trained personnel 
    incurred by all ambulance suppliers are passed on to the public.
         Provision of nonemergency, scheduled ambulance services to 
    ESRD beneficiaries for treatment or therapy to hospital-based 
    facilities that may be farther away from the beneficiary's home than 
    nonhospital-based facilities offering the same service. These 
    transports cost the Medicare program more because of the higher mileage 
    charges.
         Erroneous Medicare payment of claims for ambulance 
    services from suppliers using nonemergency vehicles that transport 
    beneficiaries whose medical condition is such that transportation in an 
    ambulance is unnecessary.
        Second, we believe the policies contained in this rule will result 
    in the consequences outlined below:
         The requirement that ambulance services be furnished in a 
    vehicle equipped and staffed to respond to a medical emergency or an 
    acute care situation will improve the overall quality of services 
    furnished to beneficiaries and eliminate payment for transportation 
    services that are furnished in a vehicle not equipped or staffed to 
    provide ambulance services. This particular aspect of the final rule 
    may cause some suppliers to have to upgrade their vehicles, equipment 
    or staff training and certification so that the vehicles meet the 
    definition of an ambulance. There may be some, however, who may not be 
    able to upgrade their vehicles or staff. We do not know how many 
    suppliers this requirement would affect; however, because we believe 
    the entities that may be affected by this final rule primarily provide 
    transportation services, such as wheelchair van transportation, we do 
    not believe the number to be substantial.
         The requirement for physicians to certify the need for 
    scheduled and certain unscheduled, nonemergency ambulance services for 
    beneficiaries to receive therapy or treatment will ensure that those 
    beneficiaries receiving the ambulance services actually require that 
    level of transport.
    
    --This requirement will affect all physicians. We estimate that there 
    are 500,000 physicians. Total burden hours imposed on physicians times 
    $15 (the estimated hourly cost for an administrative employee to 
    complete the form, less the attending physician's signature) equals an 
    additional cost of $67.5 million for physicians and a cost of $9 
    million for ambulance suppliers.
    --The physician certification provision also affects the suppliers:
    
         The physician certification provision requires, in 
    situations
    
    [[Page 3647]]
    
    involving scheduled, nonemergency transportation, suppliers to obtain, 
    from the beneficiary's attending physician, a written physician's order 
    certifying the need for ambulance transportation. The certification is 
    renewable every 60 days. Many suppliers currently provide carriers with 
    similar documentation to certify medical necessity when transporting 
    beneficiaries with ESRD. In cases where a beneficiary requires a 
    nonemergency, unscheduled ambulance transport, the supplier must 
    obtain, from the beneficiary's attending physician, the physician's 
    written certificate 48 hours after the ambulance transportation has 
    been furnished.
         The billing and reporting provision set forth in 
    Sec. 410.41(c)(2) requires ambulance suppliers to verify compliance 
    with State or local licensure and certification requirements. This 
    provision does not require the submission of information that is 
    inconsistent with information suppliers provide to State or local 
    authorities. Suppliers are already required to complete the 
    standardized HCFA-Ambulance Supplier Form and submit the appropriate 
    documentary evidence. This provision will require the photocopying of 
    documentary evidence in the possession of the supplier.
    
    --The provision permitting ESRD beneficiaries to be transported to the 
    nonhospital-based facilities nearest their home will be more 
    convenient, since they will no longer have to be transported to 
    hospital-based facilities that may be farther away. In addition, for 
    those beneficiaries this is a more cost-effective policy since 
    regularly transporting beneficiaries farther from their homes is more 
    costly.
    
         For the first time, Medicare payment may be made for 
    paramedic intercept services that meet the conditions for coverage. 
    Currently, when these services have been provided to a Medicare 
    beneficiary, the ALS paramedic intercept company has been free to bill 
    the beneficiary for the full charge of the intercept service because it 
    was not a covered service. Now that the service is covered, Medicare 
    payment will be made to the intercept company, and the beneficiary will 
    be responsible for only the applicable deductible and coinsurance. This 
    will benefit both the company and the beneficiary.
        The only State that we are aware of in which the conditions 
    described in section 4531(c) of the BBA exist is New York. After 
    consultations with the ambulance industry in New York, and examination 
    of the Medicare program data, we estimate the volume of services that 
    will be covered under this provision in a year will be between 2,000 
    and 4,000. A payment allowance of $150.00 per service (the difference 
    between the average allowance for ALS and the average allowance for BLS 
    in New York) yields a negligible cost. Because the Medicare Part B 
    coinsurance and deductible provisions apply, the program payment will 
    be between $240,000 and $480,000. The remainder of the cost will be the 
    responsibility of beneficiaries.
        Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also 
    requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits before 
    issuing any final rule with comment period that may result in an annual 
    expenditure by State, local or tribal government, in the aggregate, or 
    by the private sector of $100 million. The final rule with comment 
    period will not have an effect on the governments mentioned, and 
    private sector costs will be less than the $100 million threshold. The 
    physician certification provision requires, in situations involving 
    scheduled, nonemergency transportation, suppliers to obtain, from the 
    beneficiary's attending physician, a written physician's order 
    certifying the need for ambulance transportation. The certification is 
    renewable every 60 days. Many suppliers currently provide carriers with 
    similar documentation to certify medical necessity when transporting 
    beneficiaries with ESRD. In cases where a beneficiary requires a 
    nonemergency, unscheduled ambulance transport, the supplier must 
    obtain, from the beneficiary's attending physician, the physician's 
    written certificate 48 hours after the ambulance transportation has 
    been furnished.
        The billing and reporting provision set forth in Sec. 410.41(c)(2) 
    requires ambulance suppliers to verify compliance with State or local 
    licensure and certification requirements. This provision does not 
    require the submission of information that is inconsistent with 
    information suppliers provide to State or local authorities. Suppliers 
    are already required to complete the standardized HCFA-Ambulance 
    Supplier Form and submit the appropriate documentary evidence. This 
    provision will require the photocopying of documentary evidence in the 
    possession of the supplier.
        In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, this 
    regulation was reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
    
    IX. Other Required Information
    
    A. Waiver of Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
    
        This final rule contains a provision relating to ambulance services 
    that was not included in the proposed rule published on June 17, 1997. 
    That provision, the limited Medicare coverage of paramedic intercept 
    services in rural areas, was authorized by section 4531(c) of the BBA. 
    We ordinarily publish a notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal 
    Register to provide a period for public comment before the provisions 
    of the final rule take effect. However, we may waive that procedure if 
    we find good cause that prior notice and comment are impracticable, 
    unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.
        As explained in detail in section V of this preamble, section 
    4531(c) of the BBA authorizes us to provide coverage of paramedic 
    intercept services under very limited conditions, which are 
    specifically stated in the law. Because of the specificity of the law, 
    we have little discretion in the manner in which we implement this 
    extension of the ambulance benefit.
        This provision was not included in the proposed rule because 
    publication of the proposed rule predated enactment of the BBA. 
    Nonetheless, we have received many letters requesting that we implement 
    the provision as soon as possible. As discussed above, this change will 
    allow suppliers of paramedic intercept services that meet the statutory 
    requirements to receive payment for those services. Because those 
    suppliers are now prohibited from billing Medicare for their services, 
    Medicare beneficiaries are responsible for paying the full charge for 
    the services. We believe that it is appropriate to implement this 
    change as soon as possible to reduce the burden on Medicare 
    beneficiaries who must pay for these services out-of-pocket. Thus, we 
    find that, in this case, prior notice and comment would be 
    impracticable and unnecessary, therefore, we find good cause to waive 
    proposed rulemaking for the revisions set forth at Sec. 410.40(c) and 
    to issue these regulations as final. However, we are providing a 60-day 
    period for public comment, as indicated at the beginning of this rule, 
    on these changes.
    
    B. Response to Comments
    
        Because of the large number of items of correspondence we normally 
    receive on Federal Register documents published for comment, we are not 
    able to acknowledge or respond to them individually. Comments on the
    
    [[Page 3648]]
    
    paramedic intercept provision will be considered if we receive them by 
    the date specified in the DATES section of this preamble. We will not 
    consider comments concerning the provisions of this final rule that 
    were published in the June 17, 1997 proposed rule, whether those 
    provisions are presented in this final rule as unchanged or have been 
    revised based on public comment.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    42 CFR Part 409
    
        Health facilities, Medicare.
    
    42 CFR Part 410
    
        Health facilities, Health professions, Kidney diseases, 
    Laboratories, Medicare, Rural areas, X-rays.
    
    42 CFR Part 424
    
        Emergency medical services, Health facilities, Health professions, 
    Medicare.
        42 CFR Chapter IV is amended as set forth below:
    
    Part 409--HOSPITAL INSURANCE BENEFITS
    
        A. Part 409 is amended as set forth below:
        1. The authority citation for part 409 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42 
    U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh).
    
    
    Sec. 409.10  [Amended]
    
        2. In Sec. 409.10, the following amendments are made:
        a. In paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(5), the semicolon at the end of 
    each paragraph is removed, and a period is added in its place.
        b. In paragraph (a)(6), the words ``services; and'' are removed, 
    and ``services.'' is added in their place.
        c. A new paragraph (a)(8) is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 409.10  Included services.
    
        (a) * * *
        (8) Transportation services, including transport by ambulance.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 409.20  [Amended]
    
        3. In Sec. 409.20, the following amendments are made:
        a. In paragraph (a), the period at the end of the introductory text 
    is removed, and a colon is added in its place.
        b. In paragraph (a)(1) through (a)(5), the semicolon at the end of 
    each paragraph is removed, and a period is added in its place.
        c. In paragraph (a)(6), ``; and'' is removed, and a period is added 
    in its place.
        d. A new paragraph (a)(8) is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 409.20  Coverage of services.
    
        (a) * * *
        (8) Transportation services, including transport by ambulance.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 410--SUPPLEMENTARY MEDICAL INSURANCE (SMI) BENEFITS
    
        B. Part 410 is amended as set forth below:
        1. The authority citation for part 410 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42 
    U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh).
    
        2. Section 410.40 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 410.40  Coverage of ambulance services.
    
        (a). Basic rules. Medicare Part B covers ambulance services if the 
    following conditions are met:
        (1) The supplier meets the applicable vehicle, staff, and billing 
    and reporting requirements of Sec. 410.41 and the service meets the 
    medical necessity and origin and destination requirements of paragraphs 
    (d) and (e) of this section.
        (2) Medicare Part A payment is not made directly or indirectly for 
    the services.
        (b) Levels of services. Medicare covers ambulance services within 
    the United States at the following levels of services:
        (1) Basic life support (BLS) services.
        (2) Advanced life support (ALS) services.
        (3) Paramedic ALS intercept services described in paragraph (c) of 
    this section.
        (c) Paramedic ALS intercept services. Paramedic ALS intercept 
    services must meet the following requirements:
        (1) Be furnished in a rural area (as defined in Sec. 412.62(f) of 
    this chapter).
        (2) Be furnished under contract with one or more volunteer 
    ambulance services that meet the following conditions:
        (i) Are certified to furnish ambulance services as required under 
    Sec. 410.41.
        (ii) Furnish services only at the BLS level.
        (iii) Be prohibited by State law from billing for any service.
        (3) Be furnished by a paramedic ALS intercept supplier that meets 
    the following conditions:
        (i) Is certified to furnish ALS services as required in 
    Sec. 410.41(b)(2).
        (ii) Bills all the recipients who receive ALS intercept services 
    fro the entity, regardless of whether or not those recipients are 
    Medicare beneficiaries.
        (d) Medical necessity requirements--(1) General rule. Medicare 
    covers ambulance services only if they are furnished to a beneficiary 
    whose medical condition is such that other means of transportation 
    would be contraindicated. For nonemergency ambulance transportation, 
    the following criteria must be met to ensure that ambulance 
    transportation is medically necessary:
        (i) The beneficiary is unable to get up from bed without 
    assistance.
        (ii) The beneficiary is unable to ambulate.
        (iii) The beneficiary is unable to sit in a chair or wheelchair.
        (2) Special rule for nonemergency, scheduled ambulance services. 
    Medicare covers nonemergency, scheduled ambulance services if the 
    ambulance supplier, before furnishing the service to the beneficiary, 
    obtains a written order from the beneficiary's attending physician 
    certifying that the medical necessity requirements of paragraph (d)(1) 
    of this section are met. the physician's order must be dated no earlier 
    than 60 days before the date the service is furnished.
        (3) Special rule for nonemergency, unscheduled ambulance services. 
    Medicare covers nonemergency, unscheduled ambulance services under the 
    following circumstances:
        (i) For a resident of a facility who is under the care of a 
    physician if the ambulance supplier obtains a written order from the 
    beneficiary's attending physician, within 48 hours after the transport, 
    certifying that the medical necessity requirements of paragraph (d)(1) 
    of this section are met.
        (ii) For a beneficiary residing at home or in a facility who is not 
    under the direct care of a physician. A physician certification is not 
    required.
        (e) Origin and destination requirements. Medicare covers the 
    following ambulance transportation:
        (1) From any point of origin to the nearest hospital, CAH, or SNF 
    that is capable of furnishing the required level and type of care for 
    the beneficiary's illness or injury. The hospital or CAH must have 
    available the type of physician or physician specialist needed to treat 
    the beneficiary's condition.
        (2) From a hospital, CAH, or SNF to the beneficiary's home.
        (3) From a SNF to the nearest supplier of medically necessary 
    services not available at the SNF where the beneficiary is a resident, 
    including the return trip.
        (4) For a beneficiary who is receiving renal dialysis for treatment 
    of ESRD, from the beneficiary's home to the
    
    [[Page 3649]]
    
    nearest facility that furnishes renal dialysis, including the return 
    trip.
        (f) Specific limits on coverage of ambulance services outside the 
    United States. If services are furnished outside the United States, 
    Medicare Part B covers ambulance transportation to a foreign hospital 
    only in conjunction with the beneficiary's admission for medically 
    necessary inpatient services as specified in subpart H of part 424 of 
    this chapter.
        3. A new Sec. 410.41 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 410.41  Requirements for ambulance suppliers.
    
        (a) Vehicle. A vehicle used as an ambulance must meet the following 
    requirements:
        (1) Be specially designed to respond to medical emergencies or 
    provide acute medical care to transport the sick and injured and comply 
    with all State and local laws governing an emergency transportation 
    vehicle.
        (2) Be equipped with emergency warning lights and sirens, as 
    required by State or local laws
        (3) Be equipped with telecommunications equipment as required by 
    State or local law to include, at a minimum, one two-way voice radio or 
    wireless telephone.
        (4) Be equipped with a stretcher, linens, emergency medical 
    supplies, oxygen equipment, and other lifesaving emergency medical 
    equipment as required by State or local laws.
        (b) Vehicle staff--(1) BLS vehicles.  A vehicle furnishing 
    ambulance services must be staffed by at least two people, one of whom 
    must meet the following requirements:
        (i) Be certified as an emergency medical technician by the State or 
    local authority where the services are furnished.
        (ii) Be legally authorized to operate all lifesaving and life-
    sustaining equipment on board the vehicle.
        (2) ALS vehicles. In addition to meeting the vehicle staff 
    requirements of paragraph (b)(1) of this section, one of the two staff 
    members must be certified as a paramedic or an emergency medical 
    technician, by the State or local authority where the services are 
    being furnished, to perform one or more ALS services.
        (c) Billing and reporting requirements. An ambulance supplier must 
    comply with the following requirements:
        (1) Bill for ambulance services using HCFA-designated procedure 
    codes to describe origin and destination and indicate on claims form 
    that the physician certification is on file.
        (2) Upon a carrier's request, complete and return the ambulance 
    supplier form designated by HCFA and provide the Medicare carrier with 
    documentation of compliance with emergency vehicle and staff licensure 
    and certification requirements in accordance with State and local laws.
        (3) Upon a carrier's request, provide additional information and 
    documentation as required.
    
    PART 424--CONDITIONS FOR MEDICARE PAYMENT
    
        1. The authority citation for part 424 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42 
    U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh).
    
    
    Sec. 424.124  [Amended]
    
        In Sec. 424.124, paragraph (c)(2) is amended by removing the 
    reference to ``Sec. 410.140'' and adding in its place the reference to 
    ``Sec. 410.41''.
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program No. 93.773, 
    Medicare--Hospital Insurance; and Program No. 93.774, Medicare--
    Supplementary Medical Insurance Program)
    
        Dated: December 10, 1998.
    Nancy-Ann Min DeParle,
    Administrator, Health Care Financing Administration.
    
        Dated: January 13, 1999.
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary.
    
        Note: Addendum 1 and Addendum 2 will not appear in the Code of 
    Federal Regulations.
    
    Addendum 1
    
        NOTE TO: (INSERT NAME OF MEDICARE SUPPLIER)
    
    FROM: (INSERT NAME OF MEDICARE CARRIER)
    SUBJECT: Completion of Attached Ambulance Supplier Form
    
        The attached form must be completed by you whenever your State 
    and Local laws require that you update the licensure of your 
    vehicles and/or staff. We are also requiring that this form be 
    completed at the carrier's discretion so that the latest 
    documentation will be on file with the carrier to make appropriate 
    claims payment determinations.
        The form is self explanatory and, therefore, there are no 
    program instructions for its completion. We do not expect that it 
    will take longer than 30 minutes to answer the questions and will 
    require only another minute or two to copy and attach the 
    photocopies supporting the response to some of the questions.
        If you have any questions about completing this form please 
    contact us at (fill in the telephone number and or address of the 
    carrier).
    
    Addendum 2--Ambulance Supplier Form
    
    1. Corporate/Business Name of Ambulance Company:-----------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Trade Name of Ambulance Company:---------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    (Exactly as it appears on the vehicle(s))
    
    2. Medicare Provider Number:-------------------------------------------
    Federal Tax Identification Number:-------------------------------------
    
    3. License Number(s):--------------------------------------------------
    (A copy of the current license/certificate must be submitted with 
    this form. The effective date and expiration must be stated on the 
    license/certificate. Program payment will be based these dates.)
    
    4. Physical Address of Ambulance Company Headquarters:-----------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Mailing Address (If different):----------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Post Office Boxes and Drop Boxes are not acceptable as a physical 
    business address.)
    
        Physical address locations of any substations, other than 
    Headquarters, where vehicles are garaged (if applicable):
    
    a.---------------------------------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    b.---------------------------------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Attach additional sheets if necessary)
    
    What geographic area(s) do you serve?----------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    5. Business Telephone Number(s): (____)--------------------------------
    
    Fax Machine Number(s): (____)------------------------------------------
    
    (List telephone numbers for all locations. The business telephone 
    number(s) must be a number where patients or customers can reach you 
    or register complaints.)
    
    Name of Daily Contact Person:------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Please print name, title, and provide a telephone number, if 
    different from the business telephone number.)
    
    6. Owner's Name(s) and Social Security Number(s):----------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Identify all individuals and their Social Security Numbers or 
    entities who have ownership or controlling interest in this company. 
    Attach additional sheets if necessary.)
    
        7. Indicate the number of vehicles providing each type of 
    service. Provide a copy of the license/certification documentation 
    from the State or local regulatory agency for each vehicle:
    
    ____ Advanced Life Support
    ____ Advanced Life Support (Paramedic Intercept Squad Unit)
    ____ Advanced Life Support (Mobile Intensive Care Unit)
    ____ Basic Life Support
    ____ Air Ambulance
    
        Identify all vehicles in your fleet by providing the following 
    information:
    
    (Attach additional sheets if necessary)
    Year      Make      Model    VIN#
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    
    [[Page 3650]]
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
        8. List the name of each crew member and their individual 
    training (e.g., CPR, first aid, ACLS, etc.) A copy of their 
    certificate(s) of training must be attached. (Attach additional 
    sheets if necessary.)
    
    Name:------------------------------------------------------------------
    Training:--------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Name:------------------------------------------------------------------
    Training:--------------------------------------------------------------
    
    9. Name of Medical Director:-------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Medical License Number of Medical Director:----------------------------
    Telephone Number: (____)-----------------------------------------------
    
        10. Has your company or any owner ever been excluded from 
    participation in the Medicare or Medicaid program?
    
        Yes ______    No______
        If yes, under what corporate/business name(s), trade name(s) and 
    owner(s), did the exclusion occur?
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    List prior Medicare Identification Number(s):--------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Provide name(s) and location(s) of prior Carrier(s):
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    (If service was provided under the Medicaid program, list the prior 
    Medicaid Identification Number and the State where the service was 
    provided.)
    
        11. You agree to notify this office of any change in operation, 
    ownership, or revocation of licensure. It is also understood that 
    representatives from the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) 
    and HCFA Medicare contractors may make on-site inspections at any 
    time.
        By signing, I agree to the above statement and verify that I 
    have reviewed all of the information contained herein, or submitted 
    separately in support of this verification of compliance form, and 
    verify that the information is accurate and complete.
    
    Name and Title (please print):-----------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Address:---------------------------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Signature:-------------------------------------------------------------
    Date:------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        According to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, no persons are 
    required to respond to a collection of information unless it 
    displays a valid OMB control number. The valid OMB number for this 
    information collection is 0938-xxxx. The time required to complete 
    this information collection is estimated to average xx hours (or 
    minutes) per response, including the time to review instructions, 
    search existing data resources, gather the data needed, and complete 
    and review the information collection. If you have any comments 
    concerning the accuracy of the time estimate(s) or suggestions for 
    improving this form, please write to: HCFA, 7500 Security Boulevard, 
    Baltimore, Maryland 21244-1850, Mail Stop N2-14-26 and to the Office 
    of the Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and 
    Budget, Washington, D.C. 20503.
    
    [FR Doc. 99-1547 Filed 1-20-99; 4:15 pm]
    BILLING CODE 4120-03-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
01/25/1999
Department:
Health Care Finance Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule with comment period.
Document Number:
99-1547
Pages:
3637-3650 (14 pages)
Docket Numbers:
HCFA-1813-FC
RINs:
0938-AH13: Ambulance Services (HCFA-1813-F)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0938-AH13/ambulance-services-hcfa-1813-f-
PDF File:
99-1547.pdf
CFR: (6)
42 CFR 410.41(b)(2)
42 CFR 409.10
42 CFR 409.20
42 CFR 410.40
42 CFR 410.41
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